Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Nobel - Lwoff Andre
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 90    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Lwoff Andre:     more books (33)
  1. Orden biológico, El by André LWOFF, 1998
  2. Biochemistry and Physiology of Protozoa by Andre Lwoff, 1951-01-01
  3. A schoolboy caught in the Russian revolution;: The record of a nightmare adolescence by Andre Lwoff Mikhelson, 1935
  4. Biochemistry And Psysiology Of Protozoa by Andre Lwoff, 1951

41. Documento Sin Título
lwoff, andre, 178489. 5756, QH311
http://desarrollo.uaemex.mx/sis/biblioteca/consulta/LibBib.asp?CveBib=24&PagAct=

42. Caramba! - Nobelova Cena - Medicína (1964-1984)
1964. Bloch, Konrad I; Bloch, Konrad II; Lynen, Feodor. 1965. Jacob, FrancoisI; lwoff, andre I (franc.); lwoff, andre II; lwoff, andre III; Monod, JacquesI;
http://www.caramba.cz/page.php?PgID=949

43. Molecular Biology Notebook: Courses
with the biochemical effects of mutations. Date reviewed 17/07/00.Go lwoff, andre Michel There were many other investigations on
http://www.rothamsted.bbsrc.ac.uk/notebook/courses/bibliographies.html
Online A comprehensive package for the hands-on teaching of Molecular Biology.
Famous Lives
Beadle, George Wells ...they began the study of the development of eye pigment in Drosophila which later led to the work on the biochemistry of the genetics of the fungus Neurospora for which Beadle and Edward Lawrie Tatum were together awarded the 1958 Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine. Date reviewed: 17/07/00 Berg, Paul Paul Berg was Nobel prize in 1980 for for his fundamental studies of the biochemistry of nucleic acids, with particular regard to recombinant-DNA. Date reviewed: 17/07/00 Crick, Francis Harry Compton A critical influence in Crick's career was his friendship, beginning in 1951, with J. D. Watson, then a young man of 23, leading in 1953 to the proposal of the double-helical structure for DNA and the replication scheme. Date reviewed: 17/07/00 Discoveries concerning the replication mechanism and the genetic structure of viruses..

44. ASM Membership
Notes from interview. See also Paris trip . lwoff, andre Correspondence. Notebooknotes. (see also Watson, JD for lwoff s review of The Double Helix).
http://www.asm.org/MemberShip/index.asp?bid=16414

45. The Double Helix
Lear and another reviewer, andre lwoff, also comment on Watson’s treatmentof his colleagues. Both seem lwoff, andre. “Truth, Truth
http://www.louisville.edu/~lrbell01/thedoublehelix.htm
The Double Helix
Most people with even a casual knowledge of science know that James Watson and Francis Crick were responsible for the discovery of the structure of DNA, one of the most important discoveries in the history of science. Many also know that Watson and Crick received a Nobel Prize for their discovery. Because of the magnitude of his discovery, Watson is placed among the heroes of the scientific world. But what most don’t know is that the road Watson took to this discovery was something less than the straight and narrow. After reading his personal account of the discovery, one cannot help but wonder what kind of man he really is. Does he really deserve his place as one of the heroes of science?
To begin with, Watson came to the Cavendish lab in England, where he and Crick made this discovery, because of lies he told to his American sponsors. When the sponsors of his fellowship denied his transfer to the Cavendish to do X-ray crystallography work that he was highly unqualified to do, Watson fabricated a story to justify his stay in Cambridge. As he was in Europe supposedly to learn biochemistry, Watson used the presence of a well-known biochemist, Roy Markham, at the Cavendish to his advantage. As Watson put it “ Markham took the new quite casually that he might acquire a new model student that would never bother him by cluttering up his lab with experimental apparatus ." (Pg 30) So, under the guise of learning biochemistry Watson was able to mislead his sponsors and see his fellowship continued. Of course, he never once joined Markham in his research with plant viruses. He was too busy with DNA.

46. Unit 3 Essay For Honors English 105
They are strong statements, but through the style possess innocence and a bitof humor. In his review of the book, andre lwoff wrote lwoff, andre.
http://www.louisville.edu/~mldort01/unit3.htm
James Watson: Guilty of Being Honest
written by: Mary Lynn Dorten
James D. Watson, famous for his discovery with Francis Crick, can himself be quite the double helix- a sharp scientific mind intertwined with a child-like innocence. He has often been criticized for his honesty in his book, The Double Helix: A Personal Account of the Discovery of the Structure of DNA Watson opens his personal account with, “I have never seen Francis Crick in a modest mood. Perhaps in other company he is that way, but I never had reason so to judge him.” (9). He goes onto say that “he talked louder and faster than anyone else and, when he laughed, his location within the Cavendish was obvious (10).” From the beginning he creates the feeling of distance and separation from the emotion of the story. He simply states observations of Crick. They are strong statements, but through the style possess innocence and a bit of humor. In his review of the book, Andre Lwoff wrote: “Watson and Crick work in perfect harmony; they have cordial personal relations and Jim is often a guest at the Cricks’. Moreover, it is clear that Jim admires Francis’ brilliant mind. In view of all this, Crick’s portrait by Watson is somewhat astonishing. On reexamining the book one finds that Jim’s cold objectivity is applied to persons he likes, admires or respects as it is to crystals or base pairing. Very few are spared. May God protect us from such friends!” (230) Watson uses two distinctive voices to tell his story about the discovery of the structure of DNA. His two voices do not differ so much that they disrupt the pace of the book or create voids of relation within the text. They do just the opposite and intertwine to create Watson for the reader. He speaks candidly about his social and personal events in relation to the discovery in a descriptive and narrative form. Then within his personal accounts are more formal passages where Watson speaks as a professional scientist to an “intelligent lay audience.” It is through these two voices of Watson that his character is truly depicted. Through the two styles he illustrates his maturity in the field of science and immaturity in the social world.

47. Corresponding Members Of The BSA
Dixon, Hugh Neville, Lourteig, Alicia, Thanegaraj, G. Domin, Karel, Lundegardh,Henrik, Thomas, Hugh H. Drude, Karl George Oscar, lwoff, andre M. Troll, Wilhelm.
http://www.botany.org/bsa/membership/corresp.html
Corresponding Members of the
Botanical Society of America
Corresponding members are distinguished senior scientists who have made outstanding contributions to plant science and who live and work outside of the United States of America. Corresponding members are nominated by the Council, which receives recommendations and credentials submitted by members, and are elected by the Society in open meeting. They have all the privileges of active membership. Last revision: August 20, 2003. Archangelsky, Sergio Ehrendorfer, Friedrich Melkonian, Michael Arroyo, Mary Kalin Endress, Peter Nougarede, Arlette Ashida, Joji Fahn, Abraham Ochoa, Carlos Baas, Pieter Ferguson, Ian Keith Osborne, Daphne Bachmann, Konrad Hagemann, Wolfgang Pichi Sermolli, Rodolfo E. G. Berg, Rolf Y. Halle, Francis Prance, Ghillean Bradshaw, Tony Harper, John L. Rzedowski, Jerzy Briggs, Barbara Hegnauer, Robert Schumacher, Robert W. Buvat, Roger Andre Hejnowicz, Zygmunt

48. Nobel A Psicologia Y Medicina
Translate this page por su descubrimiento concerniente al mecanismo de regulación del colesteroly su untuoso metabolismo ácido” 1965 lwoff, andre (Francia) “ por sus
http://www.jai.com.uy/nobelpsicologiaymedicina.htm
Inicio Noticias Israel Noticias Uruguay Sociales ... Instituciones
El primer ministro israelí, Ariel Sharon, destituyó hoy a dos ministros del partido de la Unión Nacional (extrema derecha) opuestos a su plan de retirada de Gaza Premios Nobel a Judíos
Judíos laureados con el premio Nobel en Psicología y Medicina
1908 Mechnikov, Elie (Rusia)
“por sus trabajos sobre inmunología
1908 Ehrlich, Paul (Alemania)
“por sus trabajos sobre inmunología”
1914 Barany, Robert ( Austria)
“por sus trabajos en la fisiología y patología en el aparato vestibular”
1922 Meyerhof, Otto Fritz (Alemania)
“por sus estudios sobre la relación entre el consumo de oxígeno y el metabolismo
del ácido láctico en el tejido muscular”
1930 Landsteiner, Karl (Austria) “por el descubrimiento de los grupos sanguíneos humanos” 1936 Loewi, Otto (Austria)

49. AAC Database - Browse - List
1, Lwca See Livable Winter City Association. 3, lwoff, andre. 3, LWT See LondonWeekend Television, ltd. 1, LWVEF See League of Women Voters (US).Education Fund.
http://valeph.tau.ac.il/ALEPH/ENG/TAU/AAC/AAC/SCAN-F/1581546
Sourasky Central Library
Browse - AUTHOR list - ALL DOCUMENTS
The numbers in the list below indicate the number of documents listed under a term.
To display the documents, click on an eye . To move up or down the list, click on the arrow. Luzzi, Gabriella Eichinger Ferro-
See: Eichinger Ferro-Luzzi, Gabriella Luzzo, Darrell Anthony Lvdp
See: Puibusque, Louis-Guillaume,vicomte de Lvovsky, Z. Lwca
See: Livable Winter City Association Lwoff, Andre LWT
See: London Weekend Television, ltd. LWVEF
See: League of Women Voters (U.S.).Education Fund. Lyadov, Anatol Konstantinovitch, 1855-1914
See: Lyadov, Anatoly Konstantinovich,1855-1914 Lyadov, Anatoly Konstantinovich, 1855-1914 Lyall, Alethea Lyall, Alfred Comyn, Sir

50. Main Street Fine Books - Galena, Il, Rare Books, First Editions, Rare Autographs
Fine. With original envelope. Price $35.00. 14. lwoff, andre (1902).This French scientist shared the 1965 Nobel Prize in medicine.
http://www.wcinet.com/msfbooks/autogrph.cfm?c=Science

51. Catalog Report
$47.00. 17075 lwoff, andre. Biological Order. Cambridge MIT, 1962.Trade Paperback. Very Good 101 pgs., overall some foxing, creasing
http://www.bookcrazy.com/biology.htm
Catalog Report Biology : 64 Books [17954] Altman, Philip L. And Dorothy Dittmer Katz. Cell Biology 1. Bethesda: FASEB, 1976. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Hard Cover. Very Good / No Jacket. 454 pgs., a few tiny tears to cloth at spine ends, faded at spine, clean and tight [6355] Ashworth, J.M.. Microbial Differentiation. London: Cambridge University, 1973. Hard Cover. Very Good + / Very Good +. 450 pgs., lightly bumped spine ends and corners, dj lightly rubbed at spine ends, edges and corners, surface very lightly soiled [12610] Baker, John R.. Cytological Technique. London: Chapman and Hall Ltd., 1966. 5th Edition. Trade Paperback. Very Good + 149 pgs., light bumping of corners, very light soil. [24065] Bernard, Eugene E. And Morley R. Kare. Biological Prototypes and Synthetic Systems, Volume 1. NY: Plenum, 1962. 4to - over 9¾" - 12" tall. Hard Cover. Ex-Library. VG- / No Jacket. 397 pgs., lightly bumped corners, ex-library copy; has all library marks including pocket and dewey decimal on spine, fairly clean and tight nonetheless [7752] Beyenbach, K. W. (editor). Cell Volume Regulation (Comparative Physiology Ser., Vol. 4).

52. TIP NOBEL ÖDÜLLERÝ
1965. JACOB, FRANÇOIS. Fransa, Pastör Enstitüsü, Paris, d. 1920;. lwoff, andre.Fransa, Pastör Enstitüsü, Paris, d. 1902, ö. 1994; ve. MONOD, JACQUES.
http://www.tubitak.gov.tr/nobel/fizyotip-nodul.html
TIP NOBEL ÖDÜLLERÝ VON BEHRING, EMIL ADOLF Almanya, Marburg Üniversitesi, d. 1854, ö.1917: “Serum tedavini geliþtirerek özellikle difteriye karþý verdiði mücadeleyle, hastalýk ve ölümlere karþý, hekimlerin ellerine muzaffer bir silah vererek, týp bilimin hareket alanýnda yeni bir yol açtýðý için” ROSS, Sir RONALD Ýngiltere, Üniversitesi College, Liverpool, d. 1857 (Almora, Hindistan), ö. 1932: “Sýtma hastalýðý konusunda, organizmaya nasýl bulaþtýðýnýn keþfini de içeren çalýþmalarýyla hastalýða karþý mücadele yollarý konusunda baþarýlý araþtýrmalar yaptýðý için” FINSEN, NIELS RYBERG Danimarka, Finsen Medical Light Institute, Kopenhag, d. 1860, ö. 1904: “Hastalýklarýn, özellikle lupus vulgarisin yoðun ýþýk demeti ile tedavisine yaptýðý katkýlarla týp biliminin önüne yeni yeni ufuklar açtýðý için” PAVLOV, IVAN PETROVICH Rusya, Askeri Týp akademisi, St. Petersburg d. 1849, ö. 1936: “Sindirim konusunda yaptýðý çalýþmalarla, konunun yaþamsal yönlerine ýþýk tuttuðu için” KOCH, ROBERT Almanya, Institut für Infektions-Krankkheiten (Enfeksiyonlu Hastalýklar Enstitüsü), Berlin, d. 1843, ö. 1910: “Tüberkülozla ilgili keþif ve incelemeleri için” GOLGI, CAMILLO

53. TomFolio.com: Used Book List For Books Below
1087. ed., lwoff, andre, Biochemistry and Physiology of Protozoa Volume 1. Book numberPASTPAGE049814I. US$9.50. US$9.50. 1092. andre, lwoff, Biological Order.
http://www.tomfolio.com/shop/BookList.asp?mem=500&order=&page=11&pagemultiplier=

54. History Of Genetics
Several times Jacob approached andre lwoff and his colleague, JacquesMonod, for a fellowship only to be rejected every time. Finally
http://www.modares.ac.ir/elearning/mnaderi/Genetic Engineering course II/Pages/h
Genes can be turned on and off
Jacques Monod and Francois Jacob were the first to discover how genes were turned on and off.
JACQUES LUCIEN MONOD
Jacques Lucien Monod was born in Paris on February 9, 1910 but he grew up in sunny Cannes, home to the Cannes Film Festival . This may explain why Monod has been described as having an actor's craving for attention. Monod's father, Lucien, was a portrait artist, and his mother, Charlotte Todd, came from Milwaukee, Wisconsin . As a child, Monod climbed rocks, sailed yachts, hunted for fossils, and dissected cats while learning to read Greek and play the cello. By age 16, he decided to become a biologist to explain how living things work in terms that did not violate the laws of physics. Monod returned to Paris in 1928 to study natural sciences at the Sorbonne . He was convinced that genetics held the key to explaining life in these terms. He received his degree in 1931 and started pursuing a Ph.D. During this time, Boris Ephrussi took him to Caltech , the epicenter of genetics. In

55. Autographs Of Nobel Prize Winners - List And Pics
signed book Models of Business Cycles , dedic. Luria, Salvador, Med69, signedcard. lwoff, andre M. Med65, signed card. Lynen, Feodor, Med64, signed MPI card.M.
http://mitglied.lycos.de/rznobel/index2.htm
Autographs of Nobel Prize Winners
(Autogramme von Nobelpreistraeger) My List/Pics of Laureates
Signatures Data Base

till 2002 received total Chemistry Physics Medicine Peace (Persons) Peace (Organisations) Literature Economy Total (excl. organisations) Total (incl. organisations) A B C D ... Organisations A Addams, Laura Jane signed "Hull House" paper Adrian, Edgar D. signed card Aleixandre, Vicente signed card, framed Akerlof, George A. signed special Nobel 2001 card signed Nobel Paper (with others) Allais, Maurice signed handwritten letter signed Alderney FDC (sun eclipse 1999) Alferov, Zhores signed colour photo signed Sweden Nobel FDC signed colored photo signed card Alfven, Hannes G. signed book (also signed by his wife) Altman, Sidney signed card signed publication signed publication signed colour photo Alvarez, Luis W. signed card signed b/w photo Anderson, Carl D. signed card signed US FDC Anderson, Philip W. signed US FDC signed b/w photo (Repro) Andric, Ivo signed card Anfinsen, Christian B. signed card signed b/w photo (large size) signed US FDC Angell, Ralph N.

56. The Lasker Foundation | Lasker Luminaries, Marshall Nirenberg
Francois Jacob, a biologist, won the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicinealong with andre lwoff and Jacques Monod for their discovery of the genetic
http://www.laskerfoundation.org/awards/kwood/nirenberg/people.shtml
Lasker Awards Jury Members This Year's Winners Former Winners ... Paul Zamecnik Nominations
Open call to...
Nominate a Scientist

Lasker Luminaries
Marshall Nirenberg
Important People
Lazarus Astrachan
, of Oak Ridge National Laboratory, TN, published, with Eliott Volkin, surprising results that " the base composition" of the active RNA is rather close to the composition of the analogous nucleotides in phage DNA." This was a precursor to cracking the genetic code.
George Beadle established the one gene-one enzyme hypothesis with Edward Tatum. They concluded that the characteristic function of the gene was to control the synthesis of a particular enzyme.
Sydney Brenne r, with Matthew Meselson and Francois Jacob, discovered messenger RNA (mRNA). Also, Brenner and Crick established that the genetic code was made up of triplets, that is, a string of three nucleotides. Brenner was part of the Cambridge Group at the Cavendish Lab and won the Lasker Award in 1971 for this work. He later received a second Lasker Award for lifetime achievement in 2000, and is currently Distinguished Research Professor at the Salk Institute in California.
C. T. Caskey

57. The Lasker Foundation | Lasker Luminaries, James Watson
Francis Jacob Biologist who won the 1965 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicinealong with andre lwoff and Jacques Monod for their discovery of the genetic
http://www.laskerfoundation.org/awards/kwood/watson/people.html
Lasker Awards Jury Members This Year's Winners Former Winners ... Paul Zamecnik Nominations
Open call to...
Nominate a Scientist

Lasker Luminaries
James Watson
Bruce Alberts - President of the National Academy of Sciences in Washington, D.C.
Oswald T. Avery - Bacteriologist from Rockefeller University who discovered that bacterial DNA was the hereditary material in bacterial genes, proving that DNA is the genetic material responsible for heredity.
Image courtesy of the Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Archives
David Baltimore - President of Caltech, awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1975, along with Howard Temin and Renato Dulbecco for discovering how certain cancer-causing viruses affect genes. He has been influential in the area of recombinant DNA and his work has had a profound effect on understanding HIV.
Seymour Benzer - Caltech professor and winner of the National Medal of Science; a physicist in the 40's, a molecular biologist since the 50?s, and one of the first to study the connection between genes and behavior.

58. The Outdoor Bookstore, Catalog 98A - Invertebrates
3073 lwoff, andre SH Hutner eds. BIOCHEMISTRY AND PHYSIOLOGY OFPROTOZOA - 2 VOLUMES. 1st ed. NY Academic Press, 1951, 1955.
http://www.outdoorbooks.com/invert6.htm
INVERTEBRATES - Catalog '98A
All books are subject to prior sale. To reserve and order any of the following books, please go to the Used Book Order Form Click on Bargain Natural History Books to view our growing selection of new natural history books. Davis, B M. THE EARLY LIFE-HISTORY OF DOLICH-OGLOSSUS PUSILLUS RITTER - UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PUBLICATIONS IN ZOOLOGY, VOL 4, NO. 3, MARCH 31, 1908. 1st ed. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1908 pgs 187-226. wraps, small 4to, 5 plates, VG ....$ 10.00 Dawes, Ben. THE TREMATODA, WITH SPECIAL REFERENCE TO BRITISH AND OTHER EUROPEAN FORMS. 1st ed. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1946. 644 p. cloth, ex-lib, 81 figs, 7 tables, rear hinge crack, wear on edges and along spine o/w G ....$ 32.00 Gojdics, Mary. THE GENUS EUGLENA. 1st ed. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1953. 268 p. cloth, ex-lib, 8 figs, 39 plates, minor wear on corners o/w G+ ....SOLD Jagersten, Gosta. EVOLUTION OF THE METAZOAN LIFE CYCLE: A COMPREHENSIVE THEORY. 1st ed. London: Academic Press, 1972. 282 p. cloth, ex-lib, 58 figs, VG+ ....SOLD

59. HistoryForSale - Science, Inventors & Medical Autographs
Autographs andre lwoff FIRST DAY COVER SIGNED CIRCA 1964, andre lwoff- FIRST DAY COVER SIGNED CIRCA 1964 - DOCUMENT 100711, $129.00.
http://www.historyforsale.com/html/display.asp?page=33&start=45&sort=&signer=&dp

60. Salvador Luria Papers, 1923-1992
Edward, 19121991; lwoff, andre, 1902-; Magasanik, Boris; McClintock,Barbara, d1902-1992; Meselson, Matthew S; Monod, Jacques; National
http://www.amphilsoc.org/library/mole/l/luria.htm
Salvador Luria Papers
(44 linear feet) Ms. Coll. 39 American Philosophical Society 105 South Fifth Street * Philadelphia, PA 19106-3386 Table of contents Abstract A bacteriologist from MIT, Salvador E. Luria's work with Max Delbruck on bacteriophage demonstrated that bacterial resistance to certain phages arose through genetic mutations. His later work showed that phages also mutate genetically. He received the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1969 with Max Delbruck and Alfred D. Hershey. The collection is organized into seven series: I. Correspondence, 1938-1992 ; IIa. Subject Files, 1938-1990 ; IIb. Personal Material. 1923-1991 ; III. Works by Luria, 1938-1987 ; IV. Works by Others, 1944-1990 ; V. Research Notes and Notebooks, 1941-1979 ; VI. Course Material, 1931-1991 ; VII. Photographs and Negatives, 1957-1982. Arrangement: Alphabetical by folder title and then chronological within each folder.
Background note: Salvador E. Luria was born on 13 August 1912 in Turin, Italy. He received his M.D. at the University of Turin in 1935, later becoming a specialist in radiology in Rome. With the rise of fascism and anti-semitism in Italy, he left in 1938 for Paris, where he was a Research Fellow at the Institute of Radium until 1940.

A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

Page 3     41-60 of 90    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

free hit counter